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Giuseppe Giacosa (21 October, 1847 – 1 September, 1906) was an Italian , and . Regarded at the turn of the 20th century as one of Italy’s leading playwrights, Giacosa is remembered chiefly for his association with Puccini in double harness with the librettist Luigi Illica.


Life
Giuseppe Giacosa was born in Colleretto Parella, now Colleretto Giacosa, near . The son of an attorney, he took a law degree from the University of Turin and practiced for a time in his father's office in Turin, but after his first theatrical successes he decided to devote the rest of his life to the stage.

He gained initial fame for his play Una Partita a Scacchi ("A Game of Chess") in 1871. His main field was playwriting, which he accomplished with both insight and simplicity, using subjects set in Piedmont and themes addressing contemporary bourgeois values.

In 1885 he was appointed professor of history and literature at the Academy of Fine Arts in Turin, but withdrew often to the town of , near his birthplace, for periods of intense work. Brief journeys to , , , and opened the world to him, but he preferred a slightly bourgeois family life on his native soil.

In 1888 he moved to Milan, where simultaneously he was appointed director and lecturer at the Academy of Dramatic Arts and professor of dramatic literature at the Conservatory. He had the opportunity to hear many at the famous opera house and became one of 's closest friend. After only one year he left the Academy, and in 1892 he resigned from the Conservatory as well.

In the autumn of 1891 he accompanied on a tour of America with a five-act play, La Dame de Challant, which he had written for her in . In Impressioni d'America (Milan, 1899) he gives a lively account of this journey, which took him as far as the Midwest and to . He also wrote about the history and the people of his Piedmontese homeland; and, as a passionate , he described his wanderings over the mountains of the .

During the last years of his life and up to the time of his death Giacosa was director of the influential literary magazine La Lettura, published in connection with the Corriere della Sera of Milan.


Work
Giacosa's work is extraordinarily wide-ranging and includes stories and an imposing series of verse dramas. A close friend of and Émile Zola, he turned toward naturalism at the beginning of the 1880s and became, next to Verga, the most important representative of verismo on the Italian stage.

In 1883, the year before her first encounter with Arrigo Boito, appeared in and in two premières of works by Giacosa. In the autumn of 1891 she played in the première in Turin of La Signora di Challant, his Italian version of La Dame de Challant.

Giacosa's brooding drama Tristi amori, which had been inspired by Boito, was a failure at its première in Rome in 1887 because of its stark realism. Some months later, however, Eleonora Duse brought the work to triumphant success in Turin. Today it is considered his finest work, next to Come le foglie. Come le foglie has been compared to 's Cherry Orchard, while Il più forte, Giacosa's last work (1904), is reminiscent of George Bernard Shaw's Mrs. Warren's Profession.

Giacosa wrote the final polished version of the libretto for 's Manon Lescaut, which had been begun by Ruggero Leoncavallo, , Domenico Oliva, and . He also wrote the librettos used by Puccini for La bohème, and in conjunction with . Illica supplied the plot and dialogue, and Giacosa polished the libretto into verses. In addition to his work for Puccini Giacosa adapted Una partita a scacchi for a one-act opera by the composer Pietro Abbà Cornaglia (1892) and sketched out the text for an , Cain, for . The plan to write a libretto for with Illica never came to fruition.


Legacy
Outside Italy, Giacosa is possibly best known today for the libretti for Puccini's La bohème (1896), Tosca (1899), and Madama Butterfly (1903), on which he collaborated with Luigi Illica. During his lifetime, however, he was appreciated as a playwright in and : in January 1892 he attended the first performance in German of Tristi amori in Frankfurt-on-the-Main, and in the autumn of 1895 he gave a lecture in on Il cosmopolitismo e il teatro. On 8 October of the same year, the in gave the first performance of Arthur Schnitzler's Liebelei on a double bill with Giacosa's Diritti dell'anima (The rights of the soul), and towards the end of November 1900 Giacosa travelled to Berlin for a German version of Come le foglie.


See also


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